I'll just take this example. Michael Whapples, le Thu 10 Jun 2010 15:24:51 +0100, a écrit : > Like wise, an icon to start Braille seems a little pointless > as how would a blind user visually find the icon (OK, may be a partially > sighted Braille user, but if they knew of the shortcut would they just press > the keys).
But what about a sighted user (who knows not much about accessibility) who introduces another non-sighted user to Linux ? It'd still be good to have a simple clear icon to enable braille: "oh, there's braille support, let's try". It's probably simpler to just have the same lists, and not try to exclude anything just because we can't imagine a scenario. We might just lack imagination, you know :) Samuel _______________________________________________ gnome-accessibility-list mailing list gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list